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Page 69, results 1701 - 1719

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Development of the hydrosphere and atmosphere, with special reference to probable composition of the early atmosphere
William W. Rubey
1955, GSA Special Papers (62) 631-650
A satisfactory hypothesis of the development of the hydrosphere and atmosphere depends upon evidence from many sciences and the solution of many other fundamental problems of earth history. But because it is so closely related to many other problems, any progress toward unravelling the history of the hydrosphere and atmosphere...
Molybdenum blue reaction and determination of phosphorus in waters containing arsenic, silicon, and germanium
H. Levine, J.J. Rowe, F. S. Grimaldi
1955, Analytical Chemistry (27) 258-262
Microgram amounts of phosphate are usually determined by the molybdenum blue reaction, but this reaction is not specific for phosphorus. The research established the range of conditions under which phosphate, arsenate, silicate, and germanate give the molybdenum blue reaction for differentiating these elements, and developed a method for the determination...
Fusion of arkosic sand by intrusive andesite
Roy A. Bailey
1954, Open-File Report 54-14
An andesite dike in the Valles Mountains of northern New Mexico has intruded and partly fused arkosic sediments for a distance of 50 feet from its contacts. The dike is semi-circular in form, has a maximum width of about 100 feet, and is about 500 feet long. Small associated arcuate...
Double-chamber electrode for spectrochemical determination of chlorine and other halogens
L. H. Azevedo de Paiva, A. W. Specht, R. S. Harner
1954, Spectrochimica Acta (6) 331-333
A double-chamber, graphite electrode, suitable for d.c. arc determination of halogens by means of the alkaline earth halide bands, is described. An upper chamber holds the alkaline earth compound and an interconnected, lower chamber holds the halogen compound.This arrangement assures that there will be an abundance of alkaline earths in...
Petrology of granophyre in diabase near Dillsburg, Pennsylvania
Preston E. Hotz
1953, Geological Society of America Bulletin (64) 675-704
Small bodies of granophyre occur in the upper part of diabase bodies of Triassic age in southeastern Pennsylvania. One near Harrisburg was penetrated by a diamond-drill. Drill core specimens show a gradation from diabase to granophyre.New data include 10 chemical analyses, spectrographic determinations of trace elements, and the results of...
Uranium deposits at Shinarump Mesa and some adjacent areas in the Temple Mountain district, Emery County, Utah
Donald G. Wyant
1953, Trace Elements Investigations 51
Deposits of uraniferous hydrocarbons are associated with carnotite in the Shinarump conglomerate of Triassic age at Shinarump Mesa and adjacent areas of the Temple Mountain district in the San Rafael Swell of Emery County, Utah. The irregular ore bodies of carnotite-bearing sandstone are genetically related to lenticular uraniferous ore bodies...
Geology of the Quartz Creek Pegmatite District, Gunnison County Colorado
Mortimer H. Staatz, A.F. Trites
1952, Trace Elements Investigations 138
The Quartz Creek pegmatite district includes an area about 29 square miles in the vicinity of Quartz Creek in Gunnison County,. Colo. This area contains 1,803 pegmatites that are intruded into pre-Cambrian rocks. The rocks exposed in the district range in age from pre-Cambrian to Recent. The oldest pre-Cambrian rocks are...
Geologic history of sea water: An attempt to state the problem
William W. Rubey
1951, Geological Society of America Bulletin (62) 1111-1148
Paleontology and biochemistry together may yield fairly definite information, eventually, about the paleochemistry of sea water and atmosphere. Several less conclusive lines of evidence now available suggest that the composition of both sea water and atmosphere may have varied somewhat during the past; but the geologic record indicates that these...
Ilmenite, magnetite, hematite, and copper in lavas of the Keweenawan series
Henry Rowland Cornwall
1951, Economic Geology (46) 51-67
The opaque minerals in ten lava flows of the Keweenawan series of Michigan were studied microscopically by the writer. The basaltic lavas, which range in thickness from 100 to 1,400 feet, contain ilmenite, magnetite, hematite, intergrowths of magnetite-ilmenite and ilmenite-hematite, copper sulfides, native copper, and pyrite. Variations of opaque iron minerals with thickness of flow are slight, but native copper predominates in the thinner flows and copper sulfides in the thickest. Pyrite occurs only in the thickest flow....
Determination of lithium in rocks by distillation
M. H. Fletcher
1949, Analytical Chemistry (21) 173-175
A method for the quantitative extraction and recovery of lithium from rocks is based on a high temperature volatilization procedure. The sample is sintered with a calcium carbonate-calcium chloride mixture at 1200° C. for 30 minutes in a platinum ignition tube, and the volatilization product is collected in a plug...
General geology and ground-water resources of the island of Maui, Hawaii
Harold T. Stearns, Gordon Andrew Macdonald
1942, Bulletin 7
Maui, the second largest island in the Hawaiian group, is 48 miles long, 26 miles wide, and covers 728 square miles. The principal town is Wailuku. Sugar cane and pineapples are the principal crops. Water is used chiefly for irrigating cane. The purpose of the investigation was to study the...
Means of recognizing source beds
P.D. Trask, H.W. Patnode
1936, Conference Paper
Eight characteristics of sediments are considered as possible means of recognizing source beds: 1, quantity of organic matter in the sediments; 2, reducing power, which is a measure of ability of the sediments to reduce chromic acid; 3, color of sediments; 4, volatility of sediments; 5, degree of volatility, which...
The Rôle of volatiles in the formation of Virginia titanium deposits
C. S. Ross
1934, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (15) 245-245
The feldspathic rock with which the titanium deposits of Virginia are associated appears to be an anorthosite, although the plagioclase is somewhat more sodic than in normal anorthosites. That is, this rock shows evidence of having been introduced as a mush‐like mass of crystals and intersititial magma, and of undergoing...